Saturday, July 30, 2011

As Joe Girardi put it, Ivan Nova will make his return to the majors in the tonight "unless something freaky happens." Nova's had his ups and downs in his time as the Yankees' nominal fourth starter in 2011, and overall it would be fair to say that he did a serviceable job in the back-end of the rotation. As a little refresher on Nova, here are the charts and graphs that you typically see around these parts.

mph

#

LHB%

RHB%

Swing

Whiff

Zone

Chase

Watch

Ball

nsCall

GB Rate

Fastball

92.3

942

.623

.650

.469

.084

.486

.269

.319

.355

.332

.564

Curveball

79.9

371

.257

.243

.369

.234

.372

.275

.471

.434

.312

.560

Slider

84.1

88

.026

.098

.398

.514

.193

.366

.471

.466

.226

.625

Changeup

85.8

81

.094

.009

.469

.158

.506

.225

.293

.395

.256

.412

1482

.440

.143

.441

.277

.277

.383

.316

.557

Nova has good tools, with his primary offering being a four-seam fastball that can get into the mid-90s with natural sink. Despite his cross-seam grip and propensity to keep it up in the zone, the four-seamer generates plenty of ground balls. His curveball is hard and has plenty of break, but it doesn't elicit nearly enough swings and whiffs for the amount of times it's thrown for a ball. His changeup is pretty much a show-me pitch at this point. I've mentioned his slider a few times on this site, and it still looks like an intriguing pitch with plenty of potential given that he keeps it down and has been able to miss bats with it. He's brought it back into his repertoire after exiling it from April 19th to May 28th, though he still prefers the curve as his main offspeed pitch.

No doubt, this will be a big start for Nova. Phil Hughes does not look like the pitcher he was last year, and if Nova makes a good impression tonight, he could be looked at as someone to take Hughes's rotation spot.